Grit Lab Report

Hi Tapiwa,

Welcome to your personalized Grit Lab Report!

We will go week by week, reviewing everything you have told us through Poll Everywhere.

We hope this will help you reflect on what you have learned and experienced during Grit Lab.

Important note!

Sometimes, you may not have been able to respond to all polls.

If the data for one of the polls is missing, the automatic report will display NA, or ““.

Okay, let’s get started!

The first half of Grit Lab delves deep intp the passion facet of Grit.

We like to call it Choose Easy, because we think gritty people pursue what they enjoy.

Putting it graphically, gritty people tend to pursue the intersection of these four circles.

The first time we met, you told us where you were on the grit rubric.

Regarding passion you picked Stage 3: I’m actively figuring out what my interests are by trying one or more of them out in some way .

Regarding perseverance you picked .

As you know, grit grows, so don’t worry if you are not yet where you’d like to be in your grit journey.

Hopefully, this class will help you become grittier each day.

In week 2, we looked at your interests.

Interest is an emotion, and it is the opposite of boredom.

Your interests are the activities or subjects that spontaneously grab your attention.

Trying things out and seeing how you feel is the best way to refine your interests.

In week 3, we studied values, your beliefs about what is important.

You said your top three values were self-direction, benevolence, and achievement.

You wrote a “This I Believe” essay, and here’s where you located it on Schwartz’s value taxonomy.

When we talked about strengths in week 4, you said your personality strength was agreeableness.

You said your top three talents were artistic / spatial, analytic, and kinesthetic.

We then talked about goal hierarchies.

You said you had a general intuition (but nothing specific yet) about your top-level goal.

We discussed self-concordance, or how much a goal aligns to your deeply held values and beliefs.

A goal you said you will be pursuing for the next six months is to finding an internship .

Here is how self-concordant that goal was:

Don’t worry if your self-concordance for that particular goal is low.

It might mean that you need to reframe that goal in a way that makes it more relevant to your deep self, or change it!

Remember that self-concordance is goal specific, so other goals might be more self-concordant.

We then transitioned to the second part of Grit Lab:

Work Smart

In week 6, we looked at goal setting and planning.

You WOOPed!

For your Wish, what you wanted to accomplish, you said Create a job search spreadsheet/planner .

For your Outcome, what would happen if your wish came true, you said I’ll stay on top of my applications and land a job .

For you Obstacle, what it is within you that stands in your way, you said Spending all my time on classes .

For your Plan, you created this when-then plan to achieve your goal: When I get home from eating breakfast on Saturday, then I will spend up to an hour building a spreadheet .

Whether you changed your WOOP or stuck to that one, here’s where it landed between being a total fail, and going exactly according to plan.

And here’s how much you learned

These goals are hard, and despite our best efforts, our plans can fail.

The important thing is that you learn something along the way!

In week 7, we talked about deliberate practice.

You shared you’ve done daily practice in Music .

We learned that deliberate practice requires a challenging, hyperspecific goal, maximum concentration, instant feedback, and is often done alone.

In week 8, we discussed feedback.

Even though feedback can be hard to take, it is often the key to improve. So if you want to improve, seek it actively!

You said you felt nervous when receiving critical feedback, and nervous when receiving positive feedback.

We then turned to learning about stress.

In week 9, you reported feeling nearly an extreme amount of stress in your life right now, the primary source of it being time .

We also talked about adversity and failure.

Although related, adversity and failure are different:

Adversity happens to us, whereas failure is something for which we are generally more responsible.

However, how we interpret stress and failure matters…

Interestingly, research has found that people who believe that stress can facilitate learning and growth experience enhanced performance, well-being, and health.

And failure—not achieving a particular goal—can be interpreted as “I’m learning!” and lead you to look for the lesson in that experience.

We closed the Work Smart section of the class by talking about habits.

Throughout the semester, you practice habit building using your Build-A-Habit Guide book.

You describe the habit you chose as Work .

Whether you were successful in habit building or not, this is how much you learned.

Finally, what good is grit if we do not dream for others?

So, we transitioned to Paying it Forward.

In week 10, we looked at mentors: role models that take an active role in your growth.

Hopefully, your mentor was authoritative, being both supportive and demanding.

Here’s how you described them:

You also wrote a gratitude letter to Other .

In one word, you said it made you feel Awkward .

One way of paying it forward is having a prosocial, beyond-the-self purpose. Here’s how you responded to items assessing that.

… and so quickly we arrived at the end of the semester.

Here’s how your mood varied over these weeks.

Do you notice any patterns? Is there anything that correlates with your mood?

Here you can scroll through all the quotes you wrote to summarize each class.

The most helpful metaphors about success vary from moment to moment, and successful people masterfully pick the right ones for themselves/their teams as the moment demands
Interest is the seed of GRIT
Finding a role model is a fast track to purpose
GRIT isn't the only way to be happy
WOOP/MCII is state of the art, and one of the most robust results in social sciences
Deliberate practice explains much more than innate talent
Effective feedback provides both information and motivation
The process model to explain most of human behaviour
Don't rely on willpower, focus on situations/systems
Relationships are the secret ingredient
There are better ways to give than being a martyr

In the final class, we looked back to everything we’ve learned together and to how our passion and perseverance evolved during this class.

Here are the comments from your Grit Lab Teammates:

Nancy Gutzwiller
Tapiwa is such a thoughtful person. He is very welcoming, warm, and friendly. When we would sometimes get off track during our discussions, he always found a way to kindly lead us back. Tapiwa is so interesting and often offered unique insights. I’m glad to have found a friend in Tapiwa. Tapiwa’s discovery project was about his career exploration journey. A lot of the things he shared that were weighing on him definitely resonated with me – and I’m sure many others, as well. He is a good example of how we should stay open-minded to new opportunities and information that comes to light. If we’re doing the things that feel right along the way, then the outcome will too.
Vanessa Frigon
Thank you for being such a light on our team. The energy you bring every week makes our team conversations very enjoyable and go so smoothly. You are also insightful, and your opinions are always helpful. I'm glad I got to know you this semester. I really enjoyed your Discovery Project because I think you explored a topic that many of us at Penn struggle with -- finding the right major/career. I know that there was no definite conclusion to your project, but I appreciate the effort you put into exploration. I think it's important to enjoy what you study and where you work, so I like that this is a topic that means something to you also. I think that because you value passion, then you will find this in your work one day.

We hope you have emerged from Grit Lab a little grittier than you started.

Do you want to see how your grit rubric changed?

Drumroll please…

Don’t worry if the rubric doesn’t yet reflect growth. It is only a coarse measure that cannot replace your own self-reflection.

In any case, grit is not built in a day…

…remember that progress is never smooth…

…so stay passionate and persevering in the lifelong quest of choosing easy, working smart, and paying it forward.

With grit and gratitude,

Angela and the Grit Lab team.